Doyal v. State

70 Ga. 134
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 13, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 70 Ga. 134 (Doyal v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doyal v. State, 70 Ga. 134 (Ga. 1883).

Opinion

Hall, Justice.

Alfred B. Doyal was tried for the offense of murder, at: the February adjourned term, 1882, of Spalding superior court, and found guilty; whereupon he made a motion for a new trial, upon the various grounds therein set. forth, which, after being heard and considered by the court, below, was overruled and denied. To this judgment refusing the new trial exceptions were taken, and by-writ of error brought to this court..

1. The first grounds of this motion which we shall consider, are those which relate to the .disqualification of certain grand jurors who belonged to the panel that found the bill of indictment against the defendant. The mayor and council of Griffin had employed counsel to assist in this prosecution, Hancock, the party slain, being one of the police force of the city at the time he was killed. Some of' the members of the city council were on the grand jury that found the first bill. This bill, on motion of the solicitor general, was, by order the court, quashed, and an [141]*141order to that effect entered on the minutes. This order' stated no ground upon which the indictment was quashed; a subsequent order, however, was taken, showing that it-was quashed because certain named members of the city council who had employed counsel to prosecute, were of' the panel of the grand jury that found 'the bill. Upon the panel that found the second bill, there were several jurors who resided in the corporate limits and who were tax-payers. Upon the trial, several residents of the city were put upon the prisoner as jurors, and they, as well as the last named grand jurors, were all challenged as improper jurors, because of their liability to taxation to satisfy the claims of the attorneys employed by the city council to prosecute; in short, because they were from this fact necessarily interested in the prosecution, and were not omni exceptions majorss: This cause of challenge was overruled by the court, and we think correctly. The alleged interest of these jurors was so minute and so extremely remote as to be imperceptible and almost inconceivable. This objection because of interest must necessarily have some limits. It is not every degree of interest that'will disqualify! and hence it is matter of determination on many occasions as to what degree of interest will be sufficient to exclude one from the jury. It is plain that there might be some degree of remote interest in the subject-matter that ought not to be considered as rendering a person incompetent. 11 Ga., 207, 221; 29 Ibid., 105; 5 Mass. R., 90; 7 Vt., 169. In this case, it was not shown that the jurors had been called upon, nor was it suggested that they ever would be called upon to pay tax to aid in this prosecution % or, if called upon, that they would voluntarily respond, or could be compelled to respond. Even in a case where persons associated themselves together to prosecute offenders against certain ..laws, and became responsible for the expenses, according to the amount of their subscriptions, they were held competent jurors, if they had not paid in their sub[142]*142scriptions. 6 Gray, 343; cited Proffat on Jury Trial, §169.

2. When the jurors were called, and before they were empanelled and put upon the prisoner, the court inquired if any of them had excuses to offer why they should not serve. There was one Kinard on the jury who offered no excuse at that time, but remained on the panel put upon the prisoner until his name was reached and called he then stated to the court that he was over sixty years of age and desired to be excused; whereupon the court, of its own motion, granted his request. He was challenged by neither party, the state nor the prisoner. The prisoner alleges that he was an acceptable juror, and that he had exhausted all his challenges but one in order to reach him. These facts he made known to the court, and protested against Kinard being excused; but notwithstanding this, the court held him incompetent to servé, and excused him. To which ruling of the court the prisoner excepted.

That a person over sixty years of age is not a qualified juror is evident from the very words of the Code, §4681, par. 2 - and it has been held that it is the duty of the court, if apprised of the fact in time, to excuse him. Cochron vs. The State, 20 Ga., 752; Buroughs vs. The State, 38 Ib., 403.

3. Upon being arraigned, the prisoner pleaded that there had been a former presentment in this case, in which a nolle prosequi had been entered at the instance of the solicitor general, and without his Consent thereto, which he insisted relieved him from answering to the indictment or presentment on which he was then arraigned, and which had been found subsequently to that in which the nolle prosequi was entered. This plea was demurred to, and the demurrer sustained, and error is assigned thereon.

It is urged in argument that, under section 4649 of the Code of 1882, it was not proper for the court to allow the solicitor general to enter this nolle prosequi, except for some fatal defect in the bill of indictment, to be judged of by the court,'in which case the presiding judge should [143]*143order another bill of indictment to be forthwith submitted to the grand jury; or until an examination of the case had taken place in open court.

These provisions of the law are merely directory, and were intended to prevent an abuse of the power of entering a nolle prosequi by the solicitor general. They are improperly codified with what was section 4535 of the Code of 1863, and 4555 of the Code of 1868, which provided that no nolle prosequi should be entered after the case had been submitted to the jury, except by the consent of the defendant. This was evidently intended for the protection of parties accused of crime, and whenever their right to have a jury pass upon the case, after being submitted to them, has been violated, by causing a nolle prosequi to be entered without their consent, this court has invariably treated it as an acquittal. The cases to this effect are so numerous, and the principle they establish so plain, that it would be a waste of time and space to cite them. The solicitor general, by Irwin’s Revision, §415, had authority, on the terms prescribed by law, to enter a nolle prosequi on indictment. What those terms were is sufficiently indicated in the subsequent clause of that section, as also by the succeeding section. They related, as it appears, wholly to the payment of the costs that had accrued; for if he had directly or indirectly exacted in money or other valuable thing from the defendant or anybody else, more than his lawful cost, then it became a subject-matter for investigation by the grand jury; and if that body presented him for having received more than his lawful costs, then he was disqualified from further discharging his official duties until a trial could be had upon a bill of indictment, and if that trial resulted in his conviction, he was to be fined and imprisoned at the discretion of the court. This conviction was made a ground of impeachment, and the disqualification consequent upon this action was made to continue until the adjournment of the next session of the general assembly.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Ga. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyal-v-state-ga-1883.